multimedia biographies on the cbc

Last week during the DGPis40 conference, Nora Yong from CBC radio interviewed Ron Baecker on the multimedia biography project. For the past year, I have worked (on a part-time basis) with a team of researchers on this project. In brief, the research involves a research assistant working with a family where an individual has Alzheimer’s Disease or Mild Cognitive Impairment, to create a DVD movie of their life history. My main role has been to complete qualitative data analysis on the video data from the project. The video data set is from the ‘premiere’ and follow-up screenings with the participants.

To find out more about this work you can access the mp3 of the Spark episode. Ron’s segment is roughly the last third of the mP3.

trans-regalia in winnipeg

Buses are public spaces that we can use for much more than moving between two points in a city. I came across an interesting art project today titled Trans-Regalia. Tran-Regalia was envisioned by artist Cheyenne Henry to reclaim Indigenous culture in an urban context. A description from the Reclamation Winnipeg blog is quoted below.

    "Trans-Regalia is an act of Indigenous cultural and political reclamation. Artist Cheyenne Henry reclaims the public transit system in Winnipeg to launch education about urban Aboriginal issues into the public sphere. People dressed in traditional Aboriginal regalia step onto city buses and share personal stories of reclaiming their culture and identity in an urban context. The lines between participant and performer are blurred as both become viewer and viewed, sharing a common experience, a bus ride into Winnipeg's core. This act of transit reclamation opens possibilities for dialogue and understanding in the inner city."

See the Reclamation Winnipeg blog for more information.

panel presentation at KMDI

I was in a panel today as part of the design research series at KMDI. The paper (in progress that) I presented is titled: ‘Cloudtags and talk back: Sketches from critical and digital design research practice.’ With this paper, I am interested in asserting two key ideas. First, I consider Schon’s idea of talk back in the design studio. Schon describes talk back as something communicated from the design materials to the designer. I feel this idea can be extended by considering participatory media and web 2.0 technologies where user generated content and contributions are prominent. Second, I discuss how the cloudtag’s status in the design process is fluid. Tagclouds can be a rough sketch or a 'final' design artefact. This panel and the design research series in general, grew out of a reading group. It was interesting to hear the four divergent directions we have taken with papers originating from a common body of literature.

KMDI design research panel image

DGP is 40

I received an unorthodox birthday party invitation the other day. DGP is turning 40 and there is going to be a lab reunion. I am a friend of the lab and I plan to attend.

    "The University of Toronto’s Dynamic Graphics Project, in collaboration with the Department of Computer Science, invite DGP alumni and friends to attend its 40th anniversary and scientific workshop. DGPis40 celebrates the 40-year history of an incredibly successful, award-winning research group that encompasses the research areas of graphics and human-computer interaction (HCI). The event will feature talks by leaders in the field (most of whom are also DGP alumni), research demos and poster sessions by alumni, students, and faculty, and opportunities for socializing and celebrating the rich history and promising future of DGP. It will bring together 125 to 200 DGP students, faculty, alumni, faculty alumni, and friends since DGP's inception."

The full conference program is available.

I have to read more carefully to find out if there will be any cake.

transit camp 2008

I registered to attend transit camp 2008 today. It is being held at MaRS on Saturday, April 5th. What should be very interesting about this camp is that it parallels an online consultation process.

design research series at KMDI

This semester, I have been involved in the design research series at KMDI. Here is the abstract for the series of talks:

    "Epistemologically, what do designers ‘know’? Are there ‘designerly ways of knowing’ distinct from the recognised scientific and other scholarly ways of knowing? Speakers from different disciplines will take these questions as their point of departure to explore what, for them, constitutes a legitimate knowledge claim. And, since research in knowledge media design is typically trans-disciplinary, we will also explore ways of fostering communication across disciplinary boundaries and bridging traditional epistemological divides."

The series has been successful so far and I’m looking forward to the speakers in future weeks, including Nigel Cross.

SMS and hate

Tim Querengesser is a journalist who has been writing some important pieces about the use of cell phones to propagate hate in Kenya. In a recent Globe and Mail article Querengesser states:

    "The technology has pole-vaulted many African countries beyond their crumbling infrastructure and into the information age. But it has also exposed them to risks. No other continent struggles with ethnic conflict like Africa. With SMS the preferred method to communicate (they're cheaper than calls) and with cellphone-happy Kenya now picking up the pieces after ethnic war, the potential for SMS to incite hate is coming into focus."

I have paid close attention to Querengesser’s stories because in 2005, I traveled to Kenya to visit a friend who was completing an internship in Nairobi with a human rights organization. During my holiday, my friend and I threw on our backpacks and traveled around the country.

When we arrived in Lamu, on the eastern coast I remember that two posters made a strong impression on me. The first poster was pasted to the wall in one of the streets showing how fair elections should work. In cartoon style frames, the citizen was shown arriving to the polls, casting a ballot and having her finger stamped with ink. A second poster I saw was in the post office / internet café. The image of a globe, community and connectivity was conveyed.

Querengesser’s piece reminds me that overcoming the digital divide does not necessarily address a society's other inequalities.

on transparent government

A recent news story reports that under Prime Minister Harper, there has been a reduced access to scientists experienced by journalists seeking information. Scientists and civil servants more broadly are essential to share information and make government accountable to the people.

In a paper I am working on to explore the meaning of political and technological transparency, I came across an interesting quote from Canada's first Prime Minister. As Prime Minister John A. MacDonald argued passionately to defeat a motion to eliminate the Hansard in Canada after it had been in existence for only one year during our early parliamentary history. As documented by the Hansard Association of Canada he stated,

    "As a matter of history, it is of the very greatest importance that the remarks of every hon. member, who has a responsibility as the representative of the people should, if we can afford it -- and we can afford it -- be as fully recorded in the official report as those of a leader. I hope we shall not commit such a great mistake, I hope we shall not make such a relapse into barbarism as to throw over the only means by which after generations shall be able to learn what were the subjects of interest engaging our attention, what was the style of speaking and the style of thought, and what were the moving impulses of the people and their representatives in Parliament" (1881).

Please see the Hansard Association of Canada website for the full text from 1881. I'll be continuing to think about the transparency of government as something that needs to happen both inside and outside of parliament.

yes we can

I’m at home right now on the couch and Michelle Obama is on CNN and Larry King live. Seeing Michelle on TV reminds me to Google her husband on YouTube to find the Yes We Can music video.

The video is old news by now, but I felt the need to check it out anyways. When I arrived on YouTube, the counter displayed 3,409,935 views. After I played the video, I scrolled down and looked at the comments. As one might expect any political video with over 3 million hits, some of the comments contribute little to a deliberative public sphere. My overall impression of the video however, is that it packs a punch. The simple rhetorical refrain of 'Yes We Can' is inspiring to me. As a Canadian, I cannot vote in the US election but I will continue to watch with interest.

I mean what I say. It is now 12:31 am and Michelle has departed from Larry King. They've moved on to Mike Huckabee and apparently the Democrat/Republican coverage is in balance this evening.

politics: web 2.0

The provisional schedule for Politics: Web 2.0 conference being held in April 2008 at Royal Holloway University in the UK just got posted. I will be attending and presenting a paper related to photoblogging and social change.

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